11. Reference standard rationale
What to write
Rationale for choosing the reference standard (if alternatives exist).
Explanation
In diagnostic accuracy studies, the reference standard is used for establishing the presence or absence of the target condition in study participants. Several reference standards may be available to define the same target condition. In such cases, authors are invited to provide their rationale for selecting the specific reference standard from the available alternatives. This may depend on the intended use of the index test, the clinical relevance or practical and/or ethical reasons.
Alternative reference standards are not always in perfect agreement. Some reference standards are less accurate than others. In other cases, different reference standards reflect related but different manifestations or stages of the disease, as in confirmation by imaging (first reference standard) versus clinical events (second reference standard).
In the example, the authors selected the MINI, a structured diagnostic interview commonly used for psychiatric evaluations, as the reference standard for identifying depression and suicide risk in adults with epilepsy. As a rationale for their choice, they claimed that the MINI test was short to administer, efficient for clinical and research purposes, reliable and valid when compared with alternative diagnostic interviews.
Example
‘The MINI [Mini International Neuropsychiatric Inventory] was developed as a short and efficient diagnostic interview to be used in both research and clinical settings (reference supporting this statement provided by the authors). It has good reliability and validity rates compared with other gold standard diagnostic interviews, such as the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM [Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders] Disorders (SCID) and the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (references supporting this statement provided by the authors)’.1
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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